Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Luke Bryan Sets Dates for Annual Farm Tour

Luke Bryan, the son of a Georgia peanut farmer, revisits his family's farming roots again as the country superstar has announced his seventh annual Luke Bryan Farm Tour, kicking off in Fort Wayne, Indiana, on September 30th.

Like last year's trek, this year's itinerary includes eight stops, four of which, including the Fort Wayne date, are staged in cities the tour has never visited since it began in 2009. Also new to the tour are Lexington, Kentucky; Starkville, Mississippi; and Tuscaloosa, Alabama. As he's done in the past, Bryan will set aside a portion of ticket proceeds for local college scholarships. The Luke Bryan Farm Tour Scholarships are granted to students from a farming family within the communities the tour plays. Last year's tour drew more than 110,000 fans.

By the time the Farm Tour gets underway in the fall, Bryan's fifth studio album will be in stores. The "Kick the Dust Up" singer recently told Rolling Stone Country that Kill the Lights, set for release on August 7th, will be "country-er" than the two-million-selling Crash My Party, released two years ago.

"'Kick the Dust Up' is a big ol' fun stadium, uptempo [song]," he says. "But after that we have some neat stuff, with a lot of depth. Are there songs that show more maturity? Certainly. Are there songs that don't? Certainly."

Here is the full itinerary for Bryan's Farm Tour:

September 30th — Fort Wayne, Indiana    
October 1st — Lexington, Kentucky
October 2nd — Knoxville, Tennessee
October 3rd — Columbia, South Carolina
October 7th — Starkville, Mississippi
October 8th — Tuscaloosa, Alabama
October 9th — Macon, Georgia
October 10th — Valdosta, Georgia



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Bono, Edge Break Down Tumultuous Origins of U2's 'Cedarwood Road'

Bono and the Edge broke down U2's songwriting process and recalled the rough North Dublin roots that inspired the Songs of Innocence cut, "Cedarwood Road," in a revealing interview for Song Exploder.

The song gets its name and story from the street Bono grew up on, but it began — like many U2 tracks — with a guitar riff the Edge came up with at home. In speaking about these initial steps, the Edge noted he sketches songs on GarageBand and works with drum loops Larry Mullen Jr. recorded for the demo process.

"My job is to find a way to inspire Adam and Larry and Bono, so I don't often care to finish out a piece fully," the Edge said. "I just want to get something down that I think is a great starting point and then I know that whatever I come up with, they'll come up with something better. So I just need to get it going where its identity is clear and it's got some kind of vitality and point of view that's interesting."

"Cedarwood Road," however, took some time to reach its final form. While the Edge's demo sparked a new intro, chorus and crescendo, the band recorded it with lyrics everyone agreed were ultimately lacking. Bono began toying with different ideas, hitting upon his tumultuous boyhood home, which changed drastically in the Seventies when the Seven Towers housing project went up and was filled with many families that had been forcibly relocated.

"They were very unhappy, they were angry, they were annoyed — these were the people we would meet as young teenagers," Bono said. "A lot of my early memories of teenage years were of violence, and the sheer fear of leaving the house, going to catch the bus." That external violence, he added, was compounded by the kind his neighbor and best friend, the visual artist Guggi, experienced at home under the strict hand of his tough, religious father.

The revised lyrics, the Edge noted, completely changed the meaning and context of the musical motifs, while Bono added that his favorite part of the song is the guitar solo: "That has all the dignity of that neighborhood. Some dark characters indeed, but the general decency of people, the goodness, is in [the Edge's] guitar solo. I couldn't have achieved that."

"Bono loved the solo idea, and later on in the process of recording," the Edge added, "he couldn't help himself: He started singing over it."

"Cedarwood Road," Bono said, is ultimately not about exhuming the past, but understanding how it becomes a part of you. "My self and my friends dealt with the kind of skinhead, boot boy culture of the time by creating our own reality, and eventually our own rock and roll band," he said. "That's how we dealt with the fear that we felt. When I was writing about Cedarwood, the big revelation for me was that you can't really leave these things behind because they are who you are, you can never escape your upbringing."

U2 are currently in the midst of their Innocence + Experience world tour. The band's North American leg wraps up at the end of July with an eight-night stand at Madison Square Garden in New York before the group heads to Europe in September.



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Flashback: Yes Play 'Starship Trooper' on Last Tour With Classic Lineup

The death of Yes bassist Chris Squire is a tragedy on many levels, only one of which is the fact that a complete reunion of the classic lineup of the band is now impossible. Discounting the short-lived late 1980s Yes splinter group Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe, Squire played in every single incarnation of the band. They're carrying on without him with former Yes guitarist Billy Sherwood taking his place, but without Squire's thundering bass they'll never be the same again.

Sadly, Yes have been touring with a suboptimal lineup for quite some time. The last time they played with original singer Jon Anderson and classic-era keyboardist Rick Wakeman was on their 35th anniversary tour in 2004. They did 66 gigs that year, focusing the show around their 1970s classics like "Yours Is No Disgrace," "Roundabout" and "I've Seen All Good People."

Professional cameras were rolling on July 8th, 2004 when they played the Lugano Jazz Festival in Lugano, Switzerland. Here's video of an amazing "Starship Trooper," their first encore of the rainy night. Notice how crucial Squire's backing singing is to their sound, not to mention his killer bass playing. They played their final show with Anderson and Wakeman in Monterrey, Mexico three months later.

The lineup of Yes that is touring with Toto this summer now only has guitarist Steve Howe and drummer Alan White from the classic lineup. Keyboardist Geoff Downes did play on 1980's Drama, and Billy Sherwood was around for much of their 1990s work, but most Yes fans long to see Jon Anderson back on the stage. The split was pretty nasty, but after Squire passed away the former Yes frontman put out a very sweet statement.

"I feel blessed to have created some wonderful, adventurous, music with him," Anderson said. "Chris had such a great sense of humor. . .he always said he was Darth Vader to my Obiwan. I always thought of him as Christopher Robin to my Winnie the Pooh."

At the very least, let's hope that Yes get inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in the next few years so the surviving members can finally come together again. They certainly deserve it. 



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Kip Moore Admits Scrapping Entire Album for New Songs

Last June, Kip Moore was promoting a new single and expecting a fall release date for his second album. The song, "Dirt Road," had more to it than the title suggests, telling the story of a Southern kid who begins to reject the message his preacher sends down from the pulpit. Moore had been proud of the tune's loud guitars and slyly subversive message, but when radio barely played it, the subsequent LP was pushed back into 2015. Rather than cross off days on his calendar, the Georgia singer wrote and recorded an entirely new collection of tracks.

"Because of 'Dirt Road' stalling and me having more time than I thought, I scrapped the record and started over," Moore told Rolling Stone Country backstage at New York's inaugural Farmborough Festival. "The record was supposed to come out a year ago, and that stalled. And because I never stopped writing, my writing morphed into a whole 'nother thing. I liked where the body of work was going, so I decided to make that the record."

The result, Wild Ones, is now set for an August 21st release. Moore is cautious not to reveal too much, but he twice compares listening to the LP with going on a journey. "This was a very organic record," he says. "I just let the songs come to me. I didn't force anything, and it just kind of molded into a certain kind of thing. I think that it's gonna make you feel something, and that's all I can say."

The Wild Ones journey won't include "Dirt Road," but not because Moore has moved on: "I love that song and that's a big song with our fan base. You can still get it on iTunes. I just decided, 'You know what, I'm gonna open up a slot for a song nobody's heard.'"

Farmborough became the perfect place for the singer to test this new material: Though the festival drew a cross-section of country music fans, his strong Northeast following was well represented. Moore still isn't sure why the region quickly embraced him, but he suggests two possibilities: his Springsteen-influenced songs and Springsteen-sweaty live shows,

"The people are so kind to me here, and they really latched on to our band," he says. "We've been grinding in the club scene for years up here. We developed a true underground following. I don't know if it's the style of music we play. I don't know if it's because of the blue-collar lifestyle up here that they relate to me and the band. I want to feel like it's the intensity and passion we play with each and every night — that's my hope."

According to Moore, this intensity has attracted crowds that are not only growing but becoming more diverse; he likes festivals because they bring in "a sea of different walks of life." "I'm definitely seeing a massive, eclectic background at my shows," he says. "I'm not sure why that is, but I love it. I love seeing different races in my crowd."

In August of 2012, a little more than three months after the release of his debut album, Up All Night, Moore headlined a show at the 575-capacity Bowery Ballroom downtown. Even then, he was so moved by these crowds that he wrote and performed a new song about their hometown. Asked what had inspired this sentimental one-off, he attempts to describe a feeling he only gets in New York.

"There was such an electricity in the show, in the city, it made me feel 10 feet tall for so many hours," he remembers. "Then I get back to my hotel room and I was just starring out to the abyss — how big and massive that place is — and I never felt so alone in my entire life. The city has this way of holding you up and at the same time making you feel so small."



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Watch Carrie Underwood Rap in Wiz Khalifa Mash-Up

It's been more than two years since Carrie Underwood released "See You Again," the faith-fueled power ballad that doubled as her final single from 2012's Blown Away. While headlining the Big Barrel Country Music Festival last Sunday evening, though, she gave the song a 2015 makeover, throwing a snippet of Wiz Khalifa and Charlie Puth's own "See You Again" into the tune's second half. 

The mash-up arrived during the middle of her 21-song set, following a string of deep cuts like "I Know You Won't" and "Flat on the Floor." Then, with her pianist leading the charge, Underwood launched into an intimate version of "See You Again," a song she co-wrote with Hillary Lindsey and Evanescence's David Hodges. Everything sounded normal until the second chorus, which Underwood extended by singing an instantly familiar line: "It's been a long day without you, my friend, and I'll tell you all about it when I see you again." Then, while the crowd was still processing what was happening, she moved from Charlie Puth's vocal hook into Wiz Khalifa's rapped verse, pausing only to laugh at herself before barreling right back into one of the biggest choruses of 2015. 

The mash-up ended with a few final lines from Underwood's own song, with the onstage Jumbotron catching one last laugh from the singer before the lights went dark. The concert continued from there — Underwood still had hits including "Jesus, Take the Wheel" (another Hillary Lindsey collaboration) and "Something in the Water" to perform — but for festivalgoers who'd spent the entire weekend beneath rainy Delaware skies, Underwood's unexpected bridge between the country and hip-hop worlds was one of Big Barrel's easy highlights. 

Underwood's summertime tour schedule includes stops at several additional festivals, including Milwaukee's Summerfest, Michigan's Faster Horses Festival and western Ohio's Country Concert '15.



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Watch U2 Debut 'Innocence' Bonus Track 'The Crystal Ballroom' Live

U2 were about halfway through their fourth consecutive concert at Chicago's United Center when Bono announced they were going to perform a song they'd never done before. "There's a bunch of people that have been on the road since we started this tour," he said. "I have no idea how they're paying for it. I have no idea how they've skipped school and work, husbands and wives. But they've been on the road and they've been asking for one song, so we kinda nearly figured it out. We'll tell you about it before we play it. It's called 'The Crystal Ballroom.'"

The track is on the deluxe edition of Songs of Innocence. Like nearly every other song on the album, it was inspired by the group's early days in Dublin. "The Crystal Ballroom was a punk club we used to play that was called McGonagle's in East Dublin," Bono told the crowd. "But historically it's called the Crystal Ballroom. That's where, historically, my mother and father used to go. I thought it was a bit weird we ended up at a punk club where my mother and father used to make out. Something just a little funky about that, in a good way."

The group has now played every song from Songs of Innocence (including the bonus tracks) besides "Sleep Like A Baby Tonight" and "This Is Where You Can Reach Me." Every show on the Innocence + Experience Tour so far has included "The Miracle (Of Joey Ramone)," "Iris (Hold Me Close)," "Cedarwood Road," "Song For Someone," "Raised By Wolves" and "Every Breaking Wave." At select shows, they have also broken out "California (There Is No End To Love)," "Volcano," "The Troubles" and the extra track "Lucifer's Hands."

U2 play their fifth and final show at the United Center on Thursday. They have soundchecked the War tune "Two Hearts Beat As One" before the last two shows, so it's possible that will surface at some point. They have yet to play anything from Zooropa, Pop or No Line on the Horizon.



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Meet Brian Wilson's Secret Weapon: Darian Sahanaja

Darian Sahanaja has been Brian Wilson's keyboardist and musical director ever since the Beach Boy returned to the road as a solo artist in 1999, but some nights he still looks around the stage and can barely believe what he's a part of. "It can be mind-blowing," he says. "If we're playing 'God Only Knows' and I look around and see Brian and my buddies Probyn [Gregory] and Nick [Walusko] I can just lose it thinking about how we're all here because of this music."

Sahanaja has been a huge Beach Boys and Brian Wilson fan ever since he first heard "I Get Around" on Los Angeles radio as an adolescent in the mid-1970s. "It blew my mind," he says. "I thought it was a current song, so I was surprised to hear it was 10 years old. The first record I bought with my money was [the 1974 Beach Boys hits compilation] Endless Summer. I was like, 'Oh my God! I can own this music and play it any time I want?'"

As he got older, Sahanaja read the David Leaf book The Beach Boys and the California Myth and immersed himself in Pet Sounds and other post-surf-song compositions by the band. "I knew about Smile as this mythical, unfinished album," he says. "Then in the early 1980s little snippets of the album started to leak. When I met Nick Walusko, who I formed the Wondermints with, one of the first things we bonded over was Smile bootlegs. We got to know [music historian] Domenic Priore and a small group of us became the Smile intelligentsia of that period."

It was another 10 years until Sahanaja finally crossed paths with Wilson. His band the Wondermints were playing a Brian Wilson charity tribute show in Los Angeles on a bill with Alex Chilton and Apples in Stereo when the man himself showed up unexpectedly backstage. "We were playing his song 'This Whole World,'" says Sahanaja. "Apparently he perked up and was like, 'Who is that? What is that? It sounds amazing.' Somebody had to remind him it was a song he actually wrote since he had forgotten about it."

They met briefly backstage, and upon the urging of legendary L.A. DJ Rodney Bingenheimer, Brian agreed to let Sahanaja and the Wondermints back him on a couple of radio shows, and a few years later when Wilson agreed to tour in support of his solo disc Imagination Sahanaja and the Wondermints got the gig. "It was surreal and a bit nerve-racking at first," he says. "He's very fragile. I was concerned he wasn't going to make it through a whole song, let alone a show. During those first few shows I remember thinking, 'This is gonna be the one where he bolts after a song.' But he made it through the next one and the next one. Before I knew it, we had a mini-tour in our pockets. We were so thrilled."

"As a teenager I refused to see the Beach Boys because Brian wasn't playing with them. I was a little snob."

The tour was a huge success, and before Sahanaja knew it, he was touring the world with Brian playing the entirety of Pet Sounds night after night. Things got even more surreal in early 2004 when Wilson decided to resurrect Smile, with Sahanaja serving as his right-hand man on the ambitious project. The former Smile junkie now had access to the every second of archival tape from the aborted album in pristine audio quality, and eventually the albums original lyricist Van Dyke Parks joined them. "The whole thing was mind-blowing," he says. "But it's like that old superhero thing: with great power comes great responsibility."

In the years after the long Smile tour, rumors of a Beach Boys reunion tour swirled. Oddly enough, Sahanaja had never actually seen a Beach Boys concert. "As a teenager I refused to see them because Brian wasn't playing with them," he says. "I was a little snob. I was such a fan of their production and recordings that the live performances always seemed dumbed down to me. I just couldn't appreciate them as live performers when I was younger." 

He made up for lost time in 2012 when he played about 85 concerts with the reunited Beach Boys. "We had Al Jardine as a guest singer [on Brian's 2006 tour]," says Sahanaja. "And I just remember thinking, 'Oh my God, his voice!' It added so much authenticity. And then later to have Mike Love and Bruce [Johnson] and all those voices together. Those guys have something very, very special and magical."

Not long after the Beach Boys reunion tour fizzled out, Sahanaja got a call from the producers of the Brian Wilson biopic Love & Mercy. "They had just cast Paul Dano to portray 1960s Brian," he says. "They knew they had a great actor on their hands. but they wanted to know what kind of musical potential he had in terns of pulling off scenes that involved performances." He flew out to New York and met the actor at the piano room in a Brooklyn music shop. "I didn't know what to expect," he says. "I loved him as an actor, but was worried I might be dealing with some prima donna with an attitude."

His fears were quickly put to rest when he discovered that Dano was very polite, humble and extremely willing to learn. "He seemed like some of the fans I meet at shows that are extremely reverent about the music," he says. "Much to my surprise, he had a great feel for the music and had done a little bit of singing in stage productions. He had never played piano and didn't read music, but he was a fantastic study."

Sahanaja's work with Dano was so successful that the producers asked him to take on an expanded role, but he was hesitant. "I didn't want to get involved with one of those Hallmark takes of this story," he says. "There have been so many of those. I asked to meet with the director, Bill Pohlad. The first he he said to me was, 'I'm not interested in making the typical biopic.' He said he wanted to capture Brian's creative process in the studio during the making of Pet Sounds and Smile."

Most biopics have the actors lip-syncing to archival recordings, but they were determined to avoid that route. "I just thought we could do better," Sahanaja says. "And if we're trying to portray some of the greatest players of all time in the Wrecking Crew, they should be real musicians. It's a major pet peeve of mine when the actors playing musicians in movie are unconvincing, so I ended up gathering my some of my super talented musician friends to play the parts."

Sahanaja also worked extensively with the prop department to get the exact right vintage instruments. "It was really funny," he says. "The prop master said to me, 'Oh, you want them to be functional? You want the amps to work?' Normally they just fake it and fix everything in post." To make everything even more authentic, they filmed at original location of United Western Recorders (now EastWest Studios) where Pet Sounds was created, restoring it to exactly how it looked in 1966 and 1967. "It was such a thrill to play in that room," Sahanaja says. "And 80% of the music you hear during those sessions is live. The rest were recordings of early takes so they can show a work in-progress."

Dano also sings himself throughout the entire film and even plays the piano. "He worked his butt off and absorbed himself into the part," says Sahanaja. "Something like 'Surf's Up' is tricky for even an experienced keyboard player, let alone for somebody who has never played."

The movie won rave reviews when it hit theaters in early June, just weeks before Sahanaja hit the road with Wilson for a tour in support of his new album No Pier Pressure. "When I did that first tour never in my wildest dreams did I think that 16 year later we'd still be out there doing it," he says. "Over the years many people have thanked us for helping Brian out and that's polite and sweet, but it's really about the music. For so many years people thought the Beach Boys were superficial and insignificant. I used to take physical beatings from neighborhood boys for being a fan. Brian's legacy was lost for a long time, so it's been nice to see it get restored. It's nice to have played a little bit of a part in making that happen."

Wilson recently announced that he'll celebrate the 50th anniversary of Pet Sounds next year with a European tour that will mark his final time playing on the continent. Does Sahanaja think that Wilson's touring days are winding down?

"I gotta be honest," he says. "Each of the past five years I thought to myself, 'Well, this is probably going to be it,'" he says. "Brian is an interesting guy. He can be pretty lazy and you never know if you're pushing him to do something he doesn't want to do. But you don't want him to veg out and just sit around all day and become a couch potato. He does have an aversion to anything that seems like work, but there's that moment when he's playing 'God Only Knows' or 'Good Vibrations' and we get that big applause and I love seeing that energy and love just take him over. He's like a child in that he doesn't feel it until it's actually happening. It's so sweet and it's what keeps me going. Hopefully as long as he wants to continue doing this, I'll be there."



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Dierks Bentley on New York City's Surprising Reaction to Country Music

Last Friday, Dierks Bentley headlined the opening night of FarmBorough, New York City's first large-scale country music festival. His only regret was that this left him little time to hang out in Manhattan or Brooklyn. "I wish today that I could have cruised around," he told reporters backstage before his set. "I just love walking around. I got little places that I like to go — I've been coming up here enough times."

The Arizona native first visited the city in 2003, when he opened for Cross Canadian Ragweed and Pat Green at B.B. King's in Times Square. He recalled some initial fear — both for his reception and his livelihood — but all he received was an enthusiastic embrace: "It was kind of like, 'New York City, country music, are people gonna like it? How's it gonna go over?' And then you realize pretty quickly that it goes over really well."

Bentley's path to the main stage hasn't quite been linear. Although each of his seven albums has earned the singer more hits and more fans, Bentley himself has often played small shows at unusual venues. He occasionally stops by songwriter events at Joe's Pub (capacity: 190), and when he released his bluegrass-heavy Up on the Ridge, he celebrated with four shows at spots like Southpaw (400) and City Winery (250).

He sends the credit back to his most devoted followers. "I totally trust New York country fans," he continued. "They're hardcore, they're dedicated, they're appreciative that you're here. I've got this one guy who looks a lot like Will Ferrell that comes out to, like, every show I've played near the city, and he parks his pick-up truck on the street and is throwing beers out of the cooler after the end of the night."

For Bentley, FarmBorough was a place where he could see those fans, and those fans could see some of his own favorite up-and-coming acts. "There's something for everyone to kind of check out," he said. "When I was a country fan I'd go to any show no matter what the conditions were or how crappy it was put on. I just wanted to go, because that's where I knew other country fans were gonna be.

"You look at the list of people that are here for this whole weekend: Sturgill Simpson, Wade Bowen — it's not just who's current in Nashville on the country radio charts. . . Mickey [Guyton]'s here. Brandy Clark's here. It's pretty diverse. And country's such a wide genre: there's rock, pop, hip-hop, Disney, kind of all within this umbrella of country music."

A few hours later, Bentley would play one of the weekend's best sets, gesturing toward all but Disney. He covered Taylor Swift's "Welcome to New York," went on about that first B.B. King's show and didn't play a single bad song. This leaves one NYC goal for the still-rising 39-year-old: headline Madison Square Garden, an arena he's previously played on tours with Kenny Chesney and FarmBorough Night Two headliner Brad Paisley. "That'd be pretty cool," he admitted. "If I get a chance to headline the Garden it'd be 'Top of the world, ma.'"



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Apple Music: Everything You Need to Know

Nearly 15 years ago, Apple positioned itself on the digital-music vanguard with iTunes and the iPod, sending the music industry into a tizzy to quickly adapt. Now, with today's launch of the company's new streaming service, Apple Music — amid stiff competition from established streaming leaders Spotify, Pandora, Tidal and Rhapsody — it feels late to the game. While the service offers many great features, its true test lies in the months ahead, when music fans get the opportunity to sample it for three months and decide whether or not to ditch the services it's grown accustomed to as Apple slowly dipped its toes in the water.

Apple Music, which arrives as part of iOS 8.4 and will be available either as an ad-supported free service or commercial-free version for $9.99 a month after the trial period, contains many features that streaming-music fans will expect (playlists galore, algorithmically guessed genre spotlights) in addition to an emphasis on music recommendations by real-life humans. The heart of the service is Beats 1, the Trent Reznor–conceived radio station that will be free to everyone and feature programs by Dr. Dre, Elton John, St. Vincent, Zane Lowe and others. It also contains a section curated based on users' individual musical tastes with playlists and other features, another offering new music, a quasi–social network called "Connect" and, of course, a place to play a user's iTunes collection.

On the surface, the service offers Apple-fied takes on its competitors' best features – Spotify-inspired personalized recommendations and playlists, Songza-like situational playlists, easy-to-curate Pandora-esque radio stations. But digging deeper reveals a platform designed, for the most part, to present these elements in as user-friendly a way as possible. It's like a Venn diagram of streaming music's best offerings.

But whether it's intuitive or not, will Apple Music become the standout, one-stop shop for music fans that the company hopes it will be, converting devout Spotify users and proselytizing the MP3 faithful? The company offered Rolling Stone a demo of the service to find out. Here are six of Apple Music's most notable features, reviewed.

1. The service offers Netflix-style hyper-customization.
As soon as you log in to Apple Music and go to the "For You" tab, you will see an array of bubbles offering genres and, on a separate screen, artists, so you can select which artists and genres you prefer (one finger tap for "like"; two for "love"). The service will also scan your music library to see your preferred artists. Much like Netflix, this feature tells the company what music you like and what artists you are indifferent to, so as you listen, you can continue to tap on hearts to tell the company your tastes  – defining your personal algorithm – so that it can make educated guesses on playlists and other content.

For instance, when Rolling Stone selected rap, indie-rock and metal as favorite genres in the demo – and subsequently Pixies and the grindcore/death-metal group Carcass – Apple offered an "Intro to Carcass" playlist amid selections of indie hits, Melvins deep cuts and an Apple Music–curated playlist offering to help get "parents to like noise." (A valiant, decades-old quest.) Although none of the suggestions Rolling Stone received were wildly subversive, none were terribly off-base.

2. Beats 1 radio will bring familiar voices to music fans in interesting ways.
Trent Reznor's baby is the most interesting aspect of Apple Music, since it offers radio shows more akin to Sirius XM or college radio than any of its competitors. In addition to ringmaster Zane Lowe's sure-to-be-bonkers broadcasts, Beats 1 offers unique shows by Dr. Dre, Elton John, Pharrell Williams, Drake, Q-Tip, St. Vincent, Ellie Goulding, Jaden Smith and others.

It will also run non-celeb-curated shows, including Lowe's The World Record, in which the DJ picks the one song he feels everyone must listen to that day, Monday through Thursday. Gratitude will highlight an artist talking about another musician that influenced them (First up: Nas on Eric B. and Rakim's Paid in Full and Miranda Lambert on a to-be-announced Allison Moorer LP.) There's also a Chart show which, when the worldwide release day takes effect for the music business (shifting from Tuesday to Friday), will reflect what music, movies and TV are coming out in the week ahead. It also offers non-Beats channels like Pure Pop (which, when Rolling Stone hit play, began with Taylor Swift's "Style"), Soundsystem (a cross-genre mix of alternative, pop and dance aimed at millennials) and The Mixtape (classic alternative, from rock to hip-hop).

But even the artists have taken steps to make their music shows interesting. Most notable, perhaps, is St. Vincent, whose Mixtape Delivery Service finds her listening to notes from fans and dedicating an hour-long selection of songs catered to them. In one show, an 11-year-old girl made a recording noting her St. Vincent fandom and how she holds her own singing parties at night. The singer played Depeche Mode's "Enjoy the Silence," New Order's "Blue Monday" and Deee-Lite's "Groove Is in the Heart" and even chatted with the fan.

Meanwhile, Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme's Alligator Hour spins Grinderman and Roky Erickson amid his ruminations on the relationships between those artists' music and human aspirations. Dr. Dre's The Pharmacy will highlight his mixes that reflect his eclectic interests as he explains what the songs mean to him now and throughout his life, along with commentary from DJ Pooh. And Elton John's Rocket Hour will show the singer-songwriter's surprisingly diverse and current taste.

The downside to Beats 1 radio, at least for now, is that it really is radio in that these artist-curated programs will not be accessible after the fact as a podcast or on demand. Moreover, when the app launches, only a handful of shows will be listed on the Beats 1 homepage as part of a schedule, rather than something complete (though an Apple rep said the day would start with Chart, move to Lowe and then on to shows from London, New York and Los Angeles, before moving to artist programming at night). An Apple rep told Rolling Stone that the company wants people to tune in, ostensibly to build buzz as listeners attempt to figure out just what they're listening to. He did say, however, that on-demand programming will be available in the future.

3. Apple Music makes finding new music a little easier.
Discovering new music can be an arduous task for a casual music listener and an ongoing quest for the most dedicated fan, so Apple Music's editorial customization comes in handy for the service's "New" tab. The default screen shows the newest of the new from all genres each week, as picked by Apple's editors. It also offers "Hot Tracks," "Recent Releases" and "Top Songs," across all styles of music, but by selecting a particular genre offers a narrowed-down selection of everything from reggae to children's music.

The "New" tab is also where you can peruse playlists made by Apple Music Editors by genre, ones curated to activities ("BBQing," "Breaking Up," "Studying," "Partying," etc.) and by expert curators (ahem, yours truly, Rolling Stone). The major drawback to these curated lists is the unnecessary step of clicking into each one to see the brief description of what's ahead. Under "Classic Rock," for example, what is "Feelin' Fine"? Apparently it's recent music from rock "icons," ranging from Robert Plant to Spoon. Another negative aspect of this feature is the inability to drill down into subgenres and micro-genres. So if you've got a sudden hankering for exploring late-Nineties Venezuelan IDM, you're stuck with Google.

4. The "For You" tab consistently yields interesting results.
After you've plugged in all of your favorite genres and artists, the most reasonable first stop on a tour of Apple Music would be the "For You" tab on the far left. This is where the service suggests playlists based on your taste – introductions to bands, lists of deep cuts, refreshing takes on familiar artists (e.g., "Inspired by R.E.M.") – as well as full albums you might like. If you don't like what you see, pull down on the screen for a whole new list. In one instance, the metal, indie and blues–centric choices Rolling Stone made early on yielded a collage of records by Thelonious Monk, Ozzy Osbourne, Nick Cave, the Velvet Underground, the Who and Sonny Boy Williamson. Not bad. It's the sort of thing that Spotify approximates, but often comes off a bit stilted and robotic.

The one music discovery downside – outside of the "For You" tab – is that when you do look up an artist, connections to other musicians are not readily apparent. If you look up Trent Reznor, there is no clear link to Nine Inch Nails or How to Destroy Angels. And with David Bowie, there's no easy way to find – if you really, really wanted to – Tin Machine. (Though it's worth noting that the "You May Also Like" option in the Best of David Bowie album, did offer records by the Stones, Mott the Hoople and James Gang, which make sense tangentially.)

5. Apple Music wants to try its hand at an artist-centric social network.
Other than Beats 1, the main feature Apple is touting to fans that will continue to be free after the trial period is a quasi–social network called "Connect." This offers a Twitter-like feed from artists – which number in the hundreds according to an Apple rep – who wish to communicate with fans. (Any musician with songs on Apple Music or in the iTunes store can create an account.)

Ostensibly to make things easier, if you've purchased music from an artist on iTunes, you are signed up to follow them on Connect. But once you're following an artist, you can "like" posts and comment if, say, Snoop Dogg wants to test-drive new lyrics and demos alongside songs and videos. The service had not launched when Rolling Stone demoed Apple Music, but it looked pretty quiet in the demo phase with only a few artists using it.

With no other streaming-music analog on other services, this feature appears to be the service's biggest uphill battle. Twitter and Facebook already have strong locks on artist-fan relationships and it seems unlikely that many musicians would want to share potentially embarrassing works in progress with fans and risk alienating them.

Moreover, the only place where fans can interact is the comments section of each post, cutting out a major part of what Apple hopes will be a new music ecosystem: fandom. While it's possible fans would share music individually – with Apple Music's many options to post to text, email, Twitter and Facebook – the absence of fans' voices on "Connect" makes it more like a supplement to a social network than an exciting music-discovery platform. But only time will tell if it catches on. This is one place where Spotify, with its ability to follow and make playlists your friends, has a leg up.

6. It's Apple, so its music library is fairly complete.
Many artists, of course, still won't share their music with streaming services for myriad reasons (though Taylor Swift came around to Apple Music after a well-publicized power play). But it is worth noting that, because Apple does have preexisting relationships with major labels that smaller competitors like Amazon Prime Music do not, it comes to users mostly fully stocked. Moreover, like many of its competitors (including Tidal and even Amazon), you're able to make music available offline, which is especially handy to people who ride subways or live in places with spotty cell service. Even better: when you are online, you can just ask Siri to play music for you.

The Verdict: With its vast selection of music and smartly curated playlists and radio, Apple Music is robust enough to compete with, and possibly supplant, Spotify and Pandora as the go-to service for music fans. At the same time, users will need to play around with it a bit and dig to move past some of the less immediately intuitive facets (i.e., just how deep the "New" tab goes) for it to hook them.

The app's sure thing will most likely be its Beats 1 radio with its unique input from artists. But Apple will need to work the most on "Connect," which ought to premiere some exclusive content from big artists early for it to avoid the fate of Google Plus.

Ultimately, Apple Music offers well-designed interpretations of the best of its competitors, availability on millions of people's phones and premium features that will be offered at the same price as its competitors. The service makes for a welcome addition to the streaming-music landscape.



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Monday, June 29, 2015

Hear Puff Daddy, Pharrell's Hypnotic 'Finna Get Loose'

After premiering "Finna Get Loose" onstage during Sunday's BET Awards, Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs has released an official version of the hypnotic single. "Loose" finds the Bad Boy Entertainment mogul trading rhymes with Pharrell over throbbing synth-bass, skittering programmed drums and chanted backing vocals layered into a choir.  

Combs also tweeted an in-studio clip of the duo working on "Loose," promising that the track will "debut" Tuesday via Apple Music. "I wanna snatch them out they fuckin' sleep with some shit, with some tones they ain't never hear!" an impassioned Combs says in the clip. 

The BET performance was special for the performer, who reunited with a dozen of his label's most popular artists – including Mase, Lil Kim and Jadakiss – for a 10-minute medley of iconic tracks like "Mo Money, Mo Problems," "All About the Benjamins" and "Hypnotize." The night of celebration, which featured a tribute to the late, great Notorious B.I.G., took a momentarily awkward turn when Combs fell into a hole on a platform leading to the stage. 

Combs' most recent album, 2010's Last Train to Paris, was issued under the name Diddy. But the rapper-entrepreneur switched back to his original moniker, Puff Daddy, last year for "Big Homie" (featuring Rick Ross and French Montana) and "I Want the Love" (featuring Meek Mill), both singles from his upcoming LP, reportedly titled MMM. Last month on his Instagram, Combs posted a picture of Michael Jordan and announced the album's release date as June 29th, though he has yet issue a statement about the album or its track list. 



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Thomas Rhett Readies New Album 'Tangled Up'

Earlier this year, Thomas Rhett talked to Rolling Stone Country about how his affection for soul music was shaping his new album. On September 25th, fans will hear just how funky Rhett has become when he releases Tangled Up. The follow-up to 2013's It Goes Like This, his second LP features the current hit single "Crash and Burn."

During an impromptu March listening session with reporters, Rhett played a number of tracks in contention for Tangled Up, including the song he's been using to open his shows, "South Side."

"I've definitely been delving into that kind of music," he said then of R&B and, especially, Bruno Mars. "Bruno has always been one of my idols, if you will. I've caught myself watching a bunch of YouTube videos late at night, just watching his stage presence and how he handles a crowd and moves around and works it. . . Yeah, you can call it Country Bruno, or whatever you want to call it."

Set for release on the Valory Music Co. label, under the Big Machine Label Group umbrella, Tangled Up has been two years in the making, Rhett said in a statement, and draws on all genres, not just R&B.

"The title Tangled Up comes from a lyric in one of the new songs, and I think it's a cool way to point to all the different influences that I have as an artist and a songwriter — from soul and R&B to old school country to rock and everything in between," he said.

Rhett is currently on the road with Florida Georgia Line, and is also opening select stadium dates for Luke Bryan. In the fall, he'll join Brett Eldredge in co-headlining the CMT on Tour trek, dubbed the Suits & Boots Tour.

The singer is also enlisting fans in launching Tangled Up, giving them the opportunity to vote on the album's cover art in a poll on his website.



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The Game Charged With Assault, Making Criminal Threats

The Game has been arraigned and charged with a misdemeanor count of assault and battery and one felony count of making criminal threats following a March 29th incident where the rapper allegedly got into an altercation with an off-duty police officer during a basketball game. The Game will make his first court appearance in the case Monday at Los Angeles' Foltz Criminal Justice Center. The rapper faces up to three years in prison, if convicted.

Prosecutors claim that during the game at Hollywood High School, the rapper born Jayceon Taylor committed a hard foul on the unnamed police officer. Soon after, the Game approached the officer, "struck him and later threatened to kill him," the Los Angeles Country District Attorney's Office said in a statement. The Los Angeles Police Department's Hollywood Division is investigating the case.

Earlier this month, an arrest warrant was issued for the Game stemming from the March 29th incident. During the altercation, the Game reportedly told the officer, "I'm going to kill you" before punching the officer in the face. The Game later claimed that he was under the impression that the police officer had a firearm in his bag and that he only punched the officer after that person first squared up to fight, MTV reports.

According to TMZ, the police officer injured in the fight later sued the rapper, claiming he suffered from brain damage. When a process server and photographer delivered the lawsuit to the Game in April, the rapper then allegedly attacked the photographer, resulting in another police report that claimed battery.



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Faith No More Tease Foo Fighters' 'All My Life' at Belgian Festival

Glastonbury wasn't the only music festival Foo Fighters canceled on after Dave Grohl suffered a serious leg injury: The band was also scheduled to perform June 25th at Belgium's Rock Werchter Festival before Grohl's surgery nixed the Foo Fighters' slot. But much like Florence and the Machine made sure Foo Fighters' presence was felt at Glastonbury, Faith No More paid tribute to Rock Werchter's absent Thursday night headliners by providing a quick rendition of "All My Life."

Faith No More's Mike Patton delivered a pummeling version of the One by One track before the Foo Fighters song slowly devolved into a cover of the Trashmen's "Surfin' Bird." After finishing off the surf rock classic, Faith No More segued into more familiar territory: Angel Dust's "Midlife Crisis." Faith No More's Rock Werchter gig was the band's third show in a string of six concerts over six days where the Sol Invictus group traveled from Germany to Belgium to Sweden to Finland and finally to Denmark.

The Rock Werchter and Glastonbury performances were also, as of now, Foo Fighters' final canceled concerts following Grohl's leg surgery. The band is scheduled to perform next at Washington, D.C.'s RFK Stadium on July 4th, kicking off a long stretch of touring that won't conclude until a November 19th concert in Barcelona, Spain. Along the way, Foo Fighters will make a pair of visits to the Austin City Limits festival alongside baseball stadiums like New York's Citi Field, Boston's Fenway Park and Chicago's Wrigley Field.



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N.W.A Reunite (Sort of), Kendrick Lamar Thrills in L.A.

The surviving members of near-mythical reality-rap group N.W.A reunited on Saturday at Los Angeles' Staples Center in front of a nearly sold-out hometown crowd. . .Or at least most of them did. Ice Cube, MC Ren and DJ Yella were present, but Dr. Dre, rap's reclusive first billionaire, was not. Regardless, cell phones illuminated the darkness as people rushed to document a historic moment. (See video from the event here.)

"Us three haven't been onstage together in 26 years," said Cube.

"Not since 1989, really," added Ren.

The N.W.A reunion capped a long day at L.A. Live's BET Experience, a sprawling, multi-event, weekend-long festival surrounding the June 28th BET Awards. Earlier in the afternoon, folks waited for an hour outside the Los Angeles Convention Center next door to indulge in a barrage of food trucks, three concert stages, a sneaker convention, the Coca-Cola "Flava Zone," a Galaxy S-Edge recording booth, a Sprite-sponsored celebrity dunk contest hosted by former Rap City personality Big Tigger, a CoverGirl fashion show, and who knows what else. Amidst the corporate theme park, there were highlights: R&B newcomers like Timothy Bloom, Jordan Bratton and Kevin Hall delivered unappreciated sets. Janelle Monaé showcased her Wondaland Records roster (and their forthcoming EP, The Eephus) with brief performances by Roman GianArthur, St. Beauty, Deep Cotton and, best of all, Jidenna, whose "Classic Man" hit generated excited squeals from his audience. 

By nightfall, the Staples Center filled up for a distinctly West Coast-flavored showcase. First up was Top Dawg Entertainment, inheritors of the G-Funk tradition. Isaiah Rashad kicked off with a two-song rendition that featured "RIP Kevin Miller." Jay Rock continued to set the table with regional hits like "Hood Gone Love It" and "Code Red." Disappointingly, Ab-Soul launched into "Terrorist Threats," but then admitted, "I forgot the words. . .I'm gonna keep it real G. I didn't rehearse, I'm real high, all that." Then he tried to do "Bohemian Grove," but decided to "smoke some more weed" and wandered off the stage. However, Schoolboy Q rejuvenated the crowd with aggressive renderings of "Gangsta" and "Hands on the Wheel." "This ain't no jazz concert," he growled. "Wake your old ass up." He was fully engaged as he bounced around the stage, tossing out hits like "Collard Greens," "Studio" and "Man of the Year."

No surprise, but Kendrick Lamar drew the most charged reception of the night. He's never headlined a Staples Center concert, but as L.A.'s most favored son of the moment, he could have clearly filled the building on his own. Everyone rapped along to "Swimming Pools (Drank)," "Bitch Don't Kill My Vibe" and "Poetic Justice," and thankfully ignored the five-piece backing band that weighed down his set with ham-fisted funk-rock.

"Through our lifestyle, through our struggle, through our tears and our pain, we allow ourselves to prevail. Because L.A. is some strong motherfuckers," Lamar said just before launching into an enthusiastic version of "i," a highlight from his new, brilliant To Pimp a Butterfly. Then, before he delved into the "King Kunta," he said, "Out here, we love ourselves, but we never forget where we came from." However, Kendrick's final song "Alright" seemed cut short — the platform that held his band was literally rotated out of view.

Such tone-deaf production values would mar Snoop Dogg's set. He set out to perform most of Doggystyle, but didn't bother to introduce collaborators like Dogg Pound and RBX. Meanwhile, their vocals were undercut by ear-piercing feedback noises more typical of a garage band fumbling with equipment than a big-budget arena concert. But Snoop soldiered on, and eventually drew cheers for "What's My Name" and "Ain't No Fun" (where everyone blissfully sang the late Nate Dogg's verse). The crowd bounced to the Lady of Rage's "Afro Puffs," and happily grooved to Warren G's "This DJ." Their energy seemed to peak when Too $hort made a surprise appearance for "Blow the Whistle." Unfortunately, his microphone cut out just as he began to rap.

By 11 p.m.'s headliner, Ice Cube, a few people were already making their way to the exits. It was their loss. Anyone who saw Cube live during his Nineties heyday knows that he was one of the best concert acts of the era, and he proved he hadn't lost his touch. "Yo, this is my first time rocking the Staples Center," said Cube, flanked by fellow West Coast vet WC. "A lot of people don't like this old school shit. . . .But I'm gonna do it anyway." As he ripped through a medley that included "Steady Mobbin'," "How to Survive in South Central," "Jackin' for Beats" and "What Can I Do," he hearkened back to the days when he was the most feared rapper in America. 

After Ice Cube finally brought out MC Ren and DJ Yella in the middle of his set, the trio bumrushed through "Hello," Straight Outta Compton," and "Gangsta, Gangsta." MC Ren rapped "Alwayz Into Somethin," and Yella spun a tribute to the late Eazy-E. "Rest in peace to Eazy-E," said Cube. "Without his vision, a lot of this wouldn't have come to pass."

It was a thrilling, generous hour-long performance. Ice Cube seemed genuinely happy as danced with a visible glee. Although audience members continued to leave, a substantial lot stayed to cheer him on. They recognized Cube's greatness as a king of the West.

"The party's just begun! Let's keep going!" he exhorted. "Westsiiide!"



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Watch Puff Daddy Throw Bad Boy Reunion at BET Awards

An all-star performance celebrating the 20th anniversary of Puff Daddy's Bad Boy Records was among the many highlights at this year's BET Awards, which aired Sunday night. During the tribute to the iconic label, the Bad Boy mogul – donning his old school red leather ensemble – recruited a dozen of the label's biggest draws, from Mase and Lil Kim to Jadakiss and French Montana, for a 10-minute mega-medley that also paid tribute to the Notorious B.I.G.

The Bad Boy celebration packed in nods to the label's biggest hits – "Mo Money, Mo Problems," "All About the Benjamins," "Love Like This," "Hypnotize," 112's "Peaches & Cream" – and also featured Sheek Louch, Faith Evans, Fonzworth Bentley, Pharrell Williams (who introduced his new cut with Diddy, "Finna Get Loose") and one of the more embarrassing stage gaffes of Puff Daddy's career:

In addition to the Bad Boy party, the BET Awards included a pair of big time tributes: First, Robin Thicke, Ne-Yo and Tori Kelly performed some of Smokey Robinson's greatest hits to honor the singer's lifetime achievement award. Then, Janet Jackson became the first-ever recipient of BET's Ultimate Icon: Music Dance Visual Award. Ciara, Tinashe and Jason Derulo then delivered renditions of the "Rhythm Nation" singer's greatest dance moves and music videos to pay homage to Jackson.

The BET Awards also opened up at Los Angeles' Microsoft Theatre with an explosive performance by Kendrick Lamar, who busted out his To Pimp a Butterfly cut "Alright":

The show all featured artists bringing home trophies, and among the more notable wins included Beyoncé scoring three awards: Video of the Year for "7/11," Video Director of the Year with Todd Tourso and Ed Burke and Best Female R&B/Pop Artist. Nicki Minaj nabbed Best Female Hip-Hop Artist, among other awards, while Lamar was awarded Best Male Hip-Hop Artist. Sam Smith was awarded Best New Artist and Rae Sremmurd took home the Best Group award.



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Dr. Dre's 'Chronic' Available First Time Digitally on Apple Music

Taylor Swift's 1989 isn't the only major album that will exclusively be available on Apple Music: Dr. Dre's G-Funk classic The Chronic will finally make its streaming debut when Apple's relaunched service arrives on June 30th, a source close to the service confirmed to Rolling Stone.

Surprisingly, when Beats Music first arrived in 2014, The Chronic, one of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, was not part of that streaming service's catalog, even though it fell under the umbrella of Beats Electronics' deal with Apple. The album was also unavailable on competing services like Spotify and Rhapsody.

The album's absence could be explained, in part, over the rapper's legal battle over The Chronic with his former label Death Row Records. In 2011, Dre won back the digital rights of The Chronic after a judge ruled that the then-incarnation of Death Row could not sell the album digitally and granted Dre 100 percent proceeds of all Chronic online sales; Death Row retained the rights to The Chronic on all physical mediums.

Over the years, the rapper has fought over more than just The Chronic's digital rights: In 1999, Dre filed a lawsuit against Priority Records and Death Row after those labels released an album titled The Chronic 2000, even though Dre was not involved in that LP in any capacity. The rapper's 1999 album The Chronic 2001 was retitled simply 2001 to avoid confusion with the unauthorized release, although fans continued to refer to that album under its original name.



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Sunday, June 28, 2015

Ice Cube Reunites With N.W.A's DJ Yella and MC Ren Onstage

As promised, N.W.A staged a semi-reunion at Los Angeles' BET Experience Saturday night as Ice Cube performed alongside MC Ren and DJ Yella for the first time in over 25 years.

Sandwiched between a mini-set of Ice Cube solo cuts ("Check Yo Self," "You Can Do It" and "It Was a Good Day"), the N.W.A trio performed four of their tracks, including "8 Ball," "Straight Outta Compton," the 1999 reunion cut "Chin Check" and "Fuck tha Police." The trio also paid homage to the late Eazy E by referencing "Boyz-N-The-Hood" and "Foe Tha Love of $," Billboard reports.

The BET Experience concert at the Staples Center also featured performances by Snoop Dogg (who made a cameo during "Chin Check"), Kendrick Lamar, Schoolboy Q, Ab-Soul and Jay Rock. Despite the presence of many of Dr. Dre's former band mates and protégés, The Chronic rapper himself did not partake in the N.W.A. reunion.

As Ice Cube told Rolling Stone recently, the Predator rapper hadn't appeared onstage with DJ Yella since 1989 and last performed with MC Ren during their Up in Smoke Tour in 2000. "It was real cool to be onstage with him again, but that's still been 15 years ago," Ice Cuve said. "So it's real cool to get up there and with the excitement around Straight Outta Compton, the movie. I think people are going to just be extra excited to get a glimpse of us."

Ice Cube also expressed doubts that Dr. Dre would show up for the reunion. "You never know. It's like, I hope he blesses us with his presence," Ice Cube said. "But if not, I've been rockin' for a long time without anybody. So whoever shows up, I'm still gonna rock. Whoever don't show up, we still gonna rock."

Ice Cube reunited N.W.A. to celebrate the upcoming release of the group's big screen biopic Straight Outta Compton. That film, which features Ice Cube's son O'Shea Jackson, Jr. portraying his father, arrives in theatres on August 14th.

Watch fan footage of the N.W.A. performance below:



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Chris Squire, Yes Bassist and Co-Founder, Dead at 67

Chris Squire, the co-founder and longtime bassist of prog rock icons Yes and the only member of the group to feature on every studio album, has passed away just over a month after revealing that he was suffering from a rare form of leukemia. Squire was 67. Current Yes keyboardist Geoff Downes first tweeted the news, "Utterly devastated beyond words to have to report the sad news of the passing of my dear friend, bandmate and inspiration Chris Squire."

Yes confirmed Squire's death on their official Facebook page. "It's with the heaviest of hearts and unbearable sadness that we must inform you of the passing of our dear friend and Yes co-founder, Chris Squire. Chris peacefully passed away last night in Phoenix Arizona, in the arms of his loving wife Scotty," the band wrote in a statement.

"For the entirety of Yes' existence, Chris was the band's linchpin and, in so many ways, the glue that held it together over all these years. Because of his phenomenal bass-playing prowess, Chris influenced countless bassists around the world, including many of today’s well-known artists. Chris was also a fantastic songwriter, having written and co-written much of Yes' most endearing music, as well as his solo album, Fish Out of Water."

Yes was formed in 1968 after Jon Anderson met self-taught Chris Squire at a London music-industry bar; the pair were soon joined by guitarist Peter Banks, keyboardist Tony Kaye, and drummer Bill Bruford. Yes released their self-titled debut in 1968. However, it wasn’t until Steve Howe and Rick Wakeman replaced Banks and Kaye, respectively, that the prog rock group really hit it big with 1971's The Yes Album and 1972's Fragile.

Over the ensuing decades, Yes would see a parade of band members depart, enter and reenter, but Squire was the lone constant in the shape-shifting band, serving as their bassist for nearly 50 years. Squire is also credited as a co-writer on many of Yes' greatest cuts, including "I've Seen All Good People," "Starship Trooper," "Owner of a Lonely Heart," "Yours Is No Disgrace" and "Heart of the Sunrise."

In addition to his work with Yes, Squire was involved in other side and solo projects. His 1975 solo LP Fish Out of Water is revered among prog fans. Squire also teamed with Yes part-time guitarist Billy Underwood teamed for their Conspiracy project in 2000 and, more recently, formed Squackett with Genesis guitarist Steve Hackett. Yes' current incarnation featured singer Jon Davison, and as Squire told Rolling Stone, the vocalist was hired based on a recommendation from Foo Fighters' Taylor Hawkins.

In May, Squire revealed that he was recently diagnosed with acute erythroid leukemia, which would force him to miss the band's summer co-headlining tour with Toto. The absence marked the first time in the band's history that Yes performed without their longtime bassist.

"This will be the first time since the band formed in 1968 that Yes will have performed live without me," Squire said in a statement. "But the other guys and myself have agreed that Billy Sherwood will do an excellent job of covering my parts and the show as a whole will deliver the same Yes experience that our fans have come to expect over the years."

In February 2013, Rolling Stone spoke to Squire about Yes' legacy and the fact that Rush, but not Yes, were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. "Logistically, it's probably difficult for whoever the committee is to bring in Yes," Squire said. "Rush is fairly simple. It's the same three guys and always has been. They deserve to be there, no doubt about that. But there still seems to be a certain bias towards early-Seventies prog rock bands like Yes and King Crimson… In our case, we're on our 18th member. If we ever do get inducted, it would be only fair to have all the members, old and new. So that may be a problem for the committee. I don't know."



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Saturday, June 27, 2015

DMX Arrested on Multiple Outstanding Warrants

DMX was arrested on charges of unpaid child support just prior to a New York concert Friday night. The rapper was reportedly on his way to the Masters of Ceremony performance at Radio City Music Hall when New York Sheriff deputies apprehended DMX, acting on multiple arrest warrants, chiefly one issued by an Erie County, New York judge. DMX was ultimately forced to miss the concert, which also featured appearances by Mase, Rakim, Shabba Ranks, Pete Rock, the Lox and others.

A spokesperson for the sheriff's office later told PIX 11 that DMX was actually taken into custody for "several issues outstanding." In addition to the $400,000 in child support that the rapper owed in Erie County, an arrest warrant out of White Plains, New York cited the rapper for bail jumping. Another arrest warrant, this time from Yonkers, accused DMX of being an aggravated unlicensed motor vehicle operator. Lastly, there was also a complaint against DMX stemming from an April 5th robbery at a Newark, New Jersey gas station.

In the latter case, the rapper was named as a suspect in the Newark robbery after a 21-year-old man accused a member of DMX's entourage of pointing a gun and demanding the victim's money. The victim alleges that DMX himself snatched the $3,200 out of his hand and then fled into one of four black Escalades (DMX also performed a concert in New Jersey that night). No criminal charges were filed in that incident, The Washington Post reports.

The arrest is the latest legal issue to befall the "Who We Be" rapper. In the past decade, DMX has faced charges of animal cruelty, dog fighting, drug possession, weapons possession, reckless driving, driving under the influence and numerous probation infractions. Page Six reports that the rapper was bailed out after his Friday night arrest.



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The Who Revisit 50 Years of History at Final Scheduled Hometown Show

"You're a long way away," declared Pete Townshend as he walked on stage and surveyed the vast crowd stretching into the distance in London's Hyde Park. "But we will fucking reach you. . ."

Indeed, the fact that last night's Barclaycard Presents British Summer Time festival sold out 65,000 tickets in advance showed that The Who are still reaching as many people as ever. But, as things currently stand, this gig was the last scheduled hometown show on what has been billed as the Who's final major tour. And, while the band is no stranger to "farewell" tours, the show was so steeped in the Who's storied past that, at times, the feeling of something passing into history was almost inescapable.

After a big screen video showcasing the band's 50-plus year career, however, the Who started like a band in a hurry. Townshend was already windmilling his arm over his guitar by the time the second chorus of "I Can't Explain" arrived, singer Roger Daltrey brought an urgent, bluesy feel to "The Seeker" while "Who Are You" sounded as breathless and full of verve as ever.

And if, later on, the band occasionally showed its age – Daltrey starting to dedicate "The Kids Are Alright" to support act Paul Weller, before Townshend stepped in to point out Weller had actually requested "Pictures of Lily" – it was able to laugh it off, safe in the knowledge that plenty of the audience could probably relate to such senior moments. "You're not the bloody Mods," quipped Daltrey at one point, as a chant of "We are the Mods!" went up from the crowd, "You're too old!"

But there was also a large, more youthful contingent watching, keen to experience one of rock & roll's most legendary bands while they still can. Townshend thanked Weller's work with the Jam for re-igniting interest in the original Mods during the Eighties, but many fans were of an even more recent vintage. "I can sense a lot of people don't know this music," said Townshend before an intense version of 1971's "Bargain." "But it's a pleasure to play it to those of you that haven't heard it before."

The band still visited a few of the less familiar corners of its catalog, Townshend happily giving potted histories of several songs as he announced them, although he pointedly described "My Generation" as a song "for people of any age, anytime, anywhere." But it was, inevitably, the band's best-known anthems that inspired the most rapturous reception; "Pinball Wizard" and a dramatic "Baba O'Riley," complete with Daltrey harmonica solo, uniting the generations in a huge singalong.

Before a final, earth-shaking "Won't Get Fooled Again," Townshend paid tribute to his fallen bandmates, bassist Jon Entwistle and drummer Keith Moon, saying he still missed them "terribly" and reminiscing about the latter giving current Who sticksman Zak Starkey a drum kit when Starkey was just 10 years old. "So, in a way, Zak studied at the feet of… well, I won't call him the master," quipped Townshend, in good-natured form all evening. "He studied at the feet of the wanker."

And, as the last powerchord faded, Daltrey and Townshend thanked the crowd for standing by them. "We didn't think we'd last until the end of the week," said Daltrey, saluting the audience, "And here we are, all this time on."

For how much longer, remains to be seen. For now, the Who headline Glastonbury Festival on Sunday, then begin a run of U.S. dates, starting at San Diego Valley View Casino Center September 14.

"I Can't Explain"
"The Seeker"
"Who Are You"
"The Kids Are Alright"
"Pictures of Lily"
"I Can See for Miles"
"My Generation"
"Behind Blue Eyes"
"Bargain"
"Join Together"
"You Better You Bet"
"I'm One"
"Love Reign O'er Me"
"Eminence Front"
"Amazing Journey"/"Sparks"
"Pinball Wizard"
"See Me, Feel Me"/"Listening to You"
"Baba O'Riley"
"Won't Get Fooled Again"



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Friday, June 26, 2015

David Crosby: Joni Mitchell Had Aneurysm, Cannot Speak

David Crosby has revealed that Joni Mitchell suffered from an aneurysm when she was hospitalized in late May. "Nobody found her for a while," he told the Huffington Post. "She took a terrible hit. To my knowledge she is not speaking yet...She's going to have to struggle back from it the way you struggle back from a traumatic brain injury…She's a tough girl, and very smart. So, how much she's going to come back and when, I don't know and I'm not going to guess."

There has been little information about Mitchell's condition since she entered a Los Angeles hospital on May 26th. TMZ reported that she was in intensive care and had undergone a surgical procedure, but a spokesperson said she was "awake and in good spirits." Days later, her camp released an official statement: "Joni remains under observation in the hospital and is resting comfortably. We are encouraged by her progress and she continues to improve and get stronger each day."

Mitchell hasn't released an album of new material since 2007's Shine and hasn't toured since the late 1990s. She claims to suffer from a rare condition called Morgellons disease. "Morgellons is constantly morphing," she told the Daily Mail. "There are times when it's directly attacking the nervous system, as if you're being bitten by fleas and lice. It's all in the tissue and it's not a hallucination. It was eating me alive, sucking the juices out. I've been sick all my life." (A study by the CDC found that Morgellons may be a mental disorder and not a physical condition.)

Crosby has been close to Mitchell since the 1960s. "I love her," he told the Huffington Post. "She's probably the best of us - probably the greatest living singer-songwriter."

Crosby also doubled down on negative comments he made about Kanye West. "It all stands on what you produce; what you actually put down," Crosby said. "Kanye West can't write, sing or play. So I have trouble with him as anything but a poser. Produce? That means he sits in a chair while the engineer does the work. He's a poser! And I’m not backing off it."



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Thurston Moore Explains Nixed Tel Aviv Gig, Israel Boycott

Two months after Thurston Moore canceled a Tel Aviv, Israel performance without explanation, the guitarist has opened up about the "conscientious decision process" behind the nixed gig. In Moore's letter, published within The Quietus' larger story about musicians boycotting Israel over the treatment of Palestinians, the Sonic Youth rocker writes that he canceled the Tel Aviv concert both due to his support of the BDS Movement and his belief in "empowerment through choice of non-violent activism."

"With apology and thanks to everyone I work with professionally, as this decision incurs difficult rectification, and to every individual with a wish to hear us play live, I've made the decision," Moore wrote (via Stereogum), "with certitude, to fully acknowledge the dedication of the boycott until the time comes for it to be unnecessary."

Moore admits that he first began refusing offers to perform in Israel in 2005, when the BDS Movement was established. However, after a decade of turning down shows in the Middle Eastern country, "With cursory knowledge of the boycott's principles and not exactly concurring with the aspects of requesting certain limitations on cultural exchange I reconsidered and accepted a kind offer from promoters in Tel Aviv," Moore wrote.

After scheduling the April 27th Tel Aviv performance at the Barby Club, and after "serious deliberation," Moore "arrived at the personal conclusion that to perform with my band in Israel was in direct conflict to my values." The BDS Movement has called for the boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel.

"Subsequently the choice to play in Tel Aviv, while a boycott based on principles of non-violence exists, initiated for me an active study and contemplation in which emerged an enlightenment of personal judgment," Moore wrote. "This is in admiration to the fans, friends and neighbors who have engaged me in discussing the complicity of crossing this very real line of protest."

Moore joins an ever-growing collection of artists who have either boycotted or canceled Israel concerts in recent years; The Quietus puts the number at 1,000 British musicians alone, including Roger Waters, who for over two years has been at the forefront of the boycott. "They are running riot," Waters said of the Israeli government's occupation of Gaza and the West Bank in 2013, "and it seems unlikely that running over there and playing the violin will have any lasting effect."

"When Sonic Youth played Tel Aviv in 1996 it was an amazing, wonderful experience and education," Moore wrote in conclusion. "I hope to return soon."



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Glen Campbell's Daughter Ashley Details Dad's Declining Health

The influence that Glen Campbell has had on artists of every genre is undeniable. But with the decision of his family to go public with the legendary entertainer's 2011 Alzheimer's disease diagnosis, his extraordinary legacy has become even more significant and farther-reaching.

On Sunday, June 28th at 9:00 p.m. ET, CNN will exclusively broadcast the profoundly moving documentary film, Glen Campbell: I'll Be Me, a revealing look back at the phenomenal career of Campbell, who went from in-demand L.A. session guitarist to pop-country superstar around the world thanks to such iconic hits as "Gentle on My Mind," "Galveston" and "Rhinestone Cowboy." Among his fellow performers who comment on Campbell's influence are Keith Urban, Vince Gill, Kathy Mattea, Brad Paisley, John Carter Cash, Sheryl Crow, Blake Shelton, Taylor Swift, Bruce Springsteen, Paul McCartney and U2 guitarist The Edge. Campbell's final recording, "I'm Not Gonna Miss You," won a Grammy for Best Country Song earlier this year. Campbell and the song's co-writer, Julian Raymond, were also nominated for an Oscar for the emotional tune.

Glen Campbell: I'll Be Me is a heartbreaking but celebratory document of the musician's final album and his Goodbye Tour, which expanded from a five-week trek to 151 sold-out shows in an 18-month period, yet at its core, the film bravely details the Campbell family's coming to grip with the Alzheimer's diagnosis, as the performer's children, including Ashley, Shannon and Cal, who were members of his touring band, rally together in support of their dad, just as the Country Music Hall of Fame member's fans and friends have done, especially since his diagnosis was first revealed.

"It's a great way to get the message out there," Campbell's daughter, Ashley Campbell, tells Rolling Stone Country of I'll Be Me. "The film is definitely not what you think of when you think of a documentary about Alzheimer's. I think the beauty of it is that my dad is such a personable person. He's so charismatic and funny and just real, and it really shines through in this film. He puts a real human face on this disease that a lot of people are dealing with that we don't really hear about it a lot in the media. That's the conversation we're hoping to start, that it's real and it happens to people we love and that we need to personalize it."

Included in the film is a historic stop in Washington, D.C., during which the Campbell family testified before Congress, lobbying members for more research funding for a cure and meeting with House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-California) and Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health.

Acknowledging the widespread effect Alzheimer's has had on millions around the globe, Ashley says, "Everyone goes through a similar process and through this ongoing grief that happens as we take care of our loved ones with Alzheimer's. When people see the film they talk to me afterwards, they're just so relieved that it's not just them going through these things. They're not alone in this."

Although she reveals that her father, who is currently at a memory care facility in Nashville, is progressing into the late stages of the disease, Ashley says her dad is physically very healthy, adding, "He's calm most of the time, which is kind of all you can ask for in the late stages, that he's calm, content and happy and feels a lot of love in his life. Because he has aphasia, he can't really communicate very well. He doesn't really understand anything that anyone tells him anymore and he can't communicate with us very well. But he understands body language and sometimes very small words."

While the aphasia has robbed Campbell of the ability to communicate, his daughter says he still comprehends things such as like hugs and taste and sometimes even music, although the latter can prove difficult.

"Overall, he's just very happy and content in his own world and we just love hanging out with him. It's all we can ask for," she explains. "At least he's not aggravated and scared and confused all the time. He's happy and content and smiles most of the time. He still makes jokes and likes to play around, even though the jokes don't make any sense and it's gibberish; he still goes through the motions and it's still him. Like, he'll take a French fry and start smoking it like a cigar and give us all that 'joke' face. He likes to fake you out like he's handing you something, when you reach out for it he pulls it back and just laughs. He still likes to make people laugh."

In spite of tabloid reports of a rift between Campbell's wife and family and his older children from previous marriages, Ashley insists that unlike some of those stories have suggested, "No family member has ever been denied a visit to my dad. Sometimes we have restrictions as far as for his privacy and safety, like restricting photos taken or items brought in, but no family member has ever been denied.

"We have some family members who don't understand the disease and what he's going through and like to make a fuss," she continues. "What they don't know is what they're doing is a disservice to their dad and to people with Alzheimer's everywhere and their families dealing with it. What I will say to any negativity that's being spread out there by whomever and whenever, is that he is surrounded by love and he is getting the best care possible. He's not missing out on anything. He's being taken care of by people that love him and are making sure he has everything he needs."

In addition to the broadcast of the documentary, CNN.com has created and curated content related to Alzheimer's and its impact on people and families. There are medical facts about the disease, a digital short film about one man's "cruel journey" with Alzheimer's, and a look into Campbell's own experience through excerpts from the film. CNN chief medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta will also report for a digital series on the latest progress in Alzheimer's research. Following the film, a custom public service message about advances in Alzheimer's medical research will be presented and CNN's Impact Your World will gather resources for families and sufferers of Alzheimer’s online.

Two days before the film's TV debut, on Friday, June 26th, at 12:00 p.m. ET, Campbell's wife, Kim, and CNN senior medical correspondent Elizabeth Cohen will answer questions on Facebook, allowing users to share their questions about the disease and the challenges facing families and loved ones with relatives suffering from Alzheimer's.

Since participating in the documentary, Ashley Campbell has signed to Dot Records, the rejuvenated Nashville label under the Big Machine Label Group umbrella. Her first single, "Remembering," which she wrote as a tribute to her dad, comes out in early July and is also featured in the film and on the soundtrack.

Campbell says her LP, which she will be recording later this year, will be driven by two main elements: songs she has written in the last couple of years and, of course, plenty of banjo, including an instrumental written and performed with her godfather, legendary banjo picker Carl Jackson. A release date for the new album has yet to be announced.

Glen Campbell: Ill Be Me premieres Sunday, June 28th at 9:00 p.m. ET on CNN, and will be presented with limited commercial interruptions. An encore of the film will follow at 10:48 p.m. ET.



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SiriusXM to Pay Labels $210 Million Over Copyright Battle

SiriusXM has agreed to pay independent and major record labels $210 million after the satellite radio company broadcasted pre-1972 recordings for years without compensating the labels or the artists. The agreement comes after an October 2014 court decision in which a judge ruled that while copyright law didn't protect songs recorded prior to 1972, SiriusXM couldn't continue to play those tracks without properly getting licenses from all parties involved.

"This is a great step forward for all music creators," Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) chairman and CEO Cary Sherman said in a statement. "Music has tremendous value, whether it was made in 1970 or 2015. We hope others take note of this important agreement and follow SiriusXM's example."

A spokesperson for SiriusXM declined comment.

In a case filed in September 2013 as Capitol Records LLC et al vs SiriusXM Radio Inc, record labels ABKCO Music & Records, Capitol Records, Sony Music Entertainment, UMG Recordings and Warner Music Group all teamed as plaintiffs and filed their suit in California due to the state's artist-friendly interpretation of copyright law. The pro-label ruling in that case came two months after a federal court ruled that Sixties rockers the Turtles were allowed to proceed with a $100 million class-action lawsuit against SiriusXM.

Following the rulings against SiriusXM, the major record labels and the Turtles both took aim at Internet radio giant Pandora, which also failed to compensate for streaming pre-1972 recordings. "It's increasingly clear that SiriusXM, Pandora and other digital music firms who refuse to pay legacy artists and rights holders are on the wrong side of history and the law," Sherman said at the time. "It's time for that to change."

The Turtles' class-action suit against SiriusXM – which was filed in three states: California, New York and Florida – remains unresolved, the New York Times reports. While the "Happy Together" band won important rulings in both New York and California, SiriusXM was the victor in the Florida suit.



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